| 'Hydrogen Cities' Seen Driving Fuel Cell Adoption
US: October 8, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO - Mass adoption of zero-emissions fuel cell cars will start
with "hydrogen cities" in which refueling stations are rolled out to serve
individual communities rather than a large region, a top California
environment official said on Monday.
At the Reuters Global Environment Summit, California Air Resources Board
Chairman Mary Nichols said a 4-year-old plan to build a "Hydrogen Highway"
across the most populous US state would likely end up being focused on
concentrated areas.
"The model of the 'hydrogen highway' might more accurately be termed as a
'hydrogen city,' Nichols said at the Summit. "There could be some stations
strung out along major highway routes, but at least in the very early stages
the stations are going to more likely be in areas where people who use their
cars for commuting and driving normally will be able to come back to a
centralized area to get fueled up."
Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, which emit only water vapor, have long been
touted as a way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reduce the United
States' dependency on pricey crude oil. A problem with fuel cells, however,
is the lack of refueling stations, and proponents of electric cars say
hybrids and fully battery-powered vehicles are the most reliable and
cheapest ways to reduce oil consumption in the short term.
In 2004, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed an executive order to
build a network of hydrogen stations across California by 2010. Four years
later, however, there remain just a couple of dozen hydrogen stations in the
state.
The automotive and energy industries have said a "chicken and egg" debate
over what will come first -- the hydrogen cars or the stations to fuel them
-- has slowed development of fuel cell vehicles.
Nichols, however, said she expected to see "a fairly rapid buildout of
stations in the next couple of years," and expects there to be tens of
thousands of hydrogen cars in California over the next decade or so.
Currently, automakers including General Motors Corp and Honda Motor Co Ltd
are testing very small numbers of fuel cell vehicles in California.
"We're talking about going from a handful -- literally -- to hundreds to
thousands to tens of thousands over the course of maybe a decade. That's a
fast rampup," Nichols said. "Even the Prius (by Toyota Motor Corp), which is
the most wild and successful new automotive technology, went from a very
small number in the first couple of years to becoming a popular success."
(For summit blog: http://summitnotebook.reuters.com/) (Reporting by Nichola
Groom, editing by Richard Chang)
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